Thomas v. City of Saint Paul

526 F. Supp. 2d 959, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91834, 2007 WL 4373112
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedDecember 13, 2007
Docket06-CV-2860 (JMR/FLN)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 526 F. Supp. 2d 959 (Thomas v. City of Saint Paul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. City of Saint Paul, 526 F. Supp. 2d 959, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91834, 2007 WL 4373112 (mnd 2007).

Opinion

ORDER

JAMES M. ROSENBAUM, Chief District Judge.

This matter is before the Court on defendant’s motion for summary judgment *962 pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of CM Procedure (“Fed. R. CMP”). Plaintiffs, African-American business owners, claim defendant, City of Saint Paul, discriminated against them in awarding publicly-funded contracts. All parties agree plaintiffs are African-American, and defendant is a duly organized Minnesota city. For the reasons set forth herein, defendant’s motion for summary judgment is granted.

I. Background 1

A. The Parties

Defendant, City of St. Paul (“the City”), has adopted a Vendor Outreach Program (“VOP”) designed to assist minority and other small business owners in competing for City contracts. Plaintiffs, at all relevant times, were VOP-certifíed minority business owners. Each contends the City engaged in racially discriminatory illegal conduct when awarding contracts for publicly-funded projects.

1. Michael Thomas

Plaintiff Michael Thomas owns Cornerstone Community Realty & Mortgage Services. According to the complaint, his business is one of the City’s few — if not the only — African-American owned, certified minority real estate disposition service. He contends the City consistently denied him opportunities to work on publicly-funded projects because of his race. As evidence of his claim, he cites (1) the City’s failure to invite him to bid on projects related to the “Housing 5000 initia-five”; 2 (2) the City’s failure to award him contracts for the same; and (3) the fact that independent developers have not contracted with his company.

The City contends Thomas was provided opportunities to bid for City work, pointing to an occasion when he was part of a team of qualified builders and developers who entered a competitive bid for the “Phalen Village Project.” Ultimately, Thomas’s bid was rejected, and the contract was awarded to a Caucasian-owned business.

On another occasion, Thomas bid on, and the City was set to award him, a contract to market certain housing units for $40,000.

The City, however, in an attempt to broaden the contract awards to more VOP-covered businesses, divided the project into separate contracts, each set at $10,000. The City’s terms also required VOP contractors to obtain insurance, accept payment on a reimbursement basis (up to 90 days), and accept payment of the contract over a period of 12 months. Thomas declined the work, because “the terms of this contract simply did not make good business sense” for him.

2. Brian Conover

Plaintiff Brian Conover owns Abel Trucking. Conover claims he submitted subcontracting bids to provide trucking services on 22 projects to various independent developers. 3 None of the bids were accepted.

According to Conover, the independent developers awarded each subcontract to Caucasians, whose bids were no more com *963 petitive than his. Notwithstanding this contention, and after years of discovery, he offers no admissible evidence to support his claim. He has not identified the subcontractors whose bids were accepted, nor has he offered any comparison showing the accepted bid and the bid he submitted.

Conover also complains that, on other occasions, he received bidding invitations only a day before the bid was due. He maintains this practice created a barrier to competitive bidding, because it did not allow him adequate time to prepare a fairly competitive bid for the project. Once again, however, he fails to identify even one particular project to which he had only a single day to bid, and does not identify any person, of any race or background, similarly situated, who was afforded a longer period of time in which to submit a bid.

As proof of discrimination, he simply offers the independent developers’ refusal to use his company; their failure to offer him any justification for their decision; and the City’s failure to enforce the VOP.

3. Frederick Neioell

Plaintiff Frederick Newell owns Newell Abatement Services, Inc.; Lead Investigative Services, Inc.; and Nails Construction Company. He claims he submitted numerous bids on the City’s open competition projects, all of which were rejected.

Thereafter, he repeatedly contacted various Housing and Redevelopment Authority (“HRA”) officials and Department of Planning and Economic Development (“PED”) officials to complain that he did not get these jobs. Providing no specifics, he states the PED “provided a variety of excuses” about why he did not receive the work. As evidence of discrimination, New-ell cites the HRA’s and the PED’s failure to provide adequate explanations for his rejected bids, and their failure to liberally construe the mandates of the VOP in order to further the objective of providing economic opportunities to VOP-protected entities.

B. The VOP

1. Sec. 84.01. Declaration of Policy and Purpose

In the mid-1990s, two studies — but no judicial decision — found indications that the City of St. Paul, Minnesota, discriminated against women and minorities in its contracting programs. The City attempted to remedy this discrimination and prevent it in the future by creating the VOP. The program was designed to assist contractors providing goods and services to the City with access to its publicly-funded projects.

The City adopted a policy to “promote increased participation by qualified, minority-owned, women-owned, and economically disadvantaged small businesses in public contracting that is comparable to their availability in the Saint Paul marketplace.” (City of St. Paul, Minn., Administrative Code ch. 84.)

Under the VOP, the City sets annual benchmarks or levels of participation for the targeted groups. At the same time, the VOP expressly prohibits quotas. VOP benchmark levels are established, and participation of eligible businesses is reviewed *964 every three years in an effort to ensure (1) that the program seeks no more than to remedy the effects of past discrimination and prevent future discrimination, and becomes neither a quota program, nor cap participation of qualified businesses. The VOP’s provisions apply to all contracts entered into or awarded, including prime and vendor contracts. Importantly, however, the VOP program applies only to the City of St. Paul; it does not refer to, or bind, any other governmental agency.

2. Sec. 8Jp.08. Prime Contract Requirements

The VOP imposes various “good faith” requirements on prime contractors who bid for City projects.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
526 F. Supp. 2d 959, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91834, 2007 WL 4373112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-city-of-saint-paul-mnd-2007.